MEMORANDUM OPINION *
This mаtter comes before the Court on the plaintiff’s application for judgment. The plaintiff’s fraud, breach of contract, and related claims have been submitted to an arbitration panel at the insistence of the defendant. The arbitrators, having considered those claims and having found them meritorious, have awarded the plaintiffs $41,091.25 in compensatory damages. In addition, because they found the defendant guilty of willful misrepresentations of *355 material fact concerning the transaction at issue, the arbitrators have awarded the plaintiffs the further sum of $108,908.75 in punitive damages. However, the defendant, once the champion of the need for arbitration in this case, now expresses dissatisfaction with the results achieved by that process. Having once argued strenuously that the arbitration clause contained in the parties’ contract required arbitration of all of the plaintiff’s claims, 1 the defendant now seeks to qualify its previous position. Now, for the first time, the defendant argues that the arbitration panel lacked authority to consider the plaintiff’s claims for punitive damages. On this basis, the defendant has filed a motion to vacate the award of punitive damages. 2 Because the Court is satisfied that the arbitrators’ award was within the broad scope of their authority under the contract and under law, the defendant’s motion will be overruled and judgment entered in accordance with the arbitral award.
BACKGROUND
This action began when the plaintiff, Willoughby Roofing & Supply Company (“Willoughby Roofing”), filed suit in the Circuit Court of Madison County, Alabama. The complaint sought compensatory and punitive damages for breach of contract, fraud, misrepresentation, and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing by the defendant, Kajima International, Inc. (“Kajima”). These claims emanated from a contract between the parties whereby plaintiff, as subcontractor, was to construct and install a roof on a building for Kajima, the general contractor on a certain construction project in Huntsville, Alabama. Willoughby Roofing had allegedly prepared its bid on the roofing job in reliance on certain representations by Kajima as to the plans and specificatiоns that would have to be followed in constructing the roof. Following acceptance of Willoughby Roofing’s bid, however, those plans and specifications were materially altered by Kajima, so much so that the cost to the plaintiff of completing the contract would have been substantially higher than anticipated. Therefore, Willoughby sought to renegotiate the contract price or to submit a new bid. Despite the fact that Willoughby had gone to considerable expense in preparing to fulfill the contract under the original specifications, Kajima chose instead to cancel the contract and engage another subcontractor to do the work.
It was at this point that the stаte court action was filed. Shortly thereafter, the case was removed to this Court by the defendant. Following removal, the defendant filed a motion for a stay of the proceedings pending arbitration. This motion was based upon the arbitration clause of the contract between the parties:
Section 6.07. Arbitration.
All claims, disputes, and other matters in question arising out of, or relating to, this Agreement or a Work Assignment or the breach thereof, except with respect to matters for which the Architect’s decision shall be final and binding as provided in this Agreement, shall be resolved by arbitration in accordance with the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules of the American Arbitration Association unless the parties mutually agree otherwise. This agrеement to arbitrate shall be specifically enforceable under the prevailing arbitration law. The award rendered by the arbitrators shall be final, and judgment may be entered upon it in accordance with applicable law in any court having jurisdiction thereof.
This arbitration clause is, of course, quite broad, and it evinces an intent of the parties to vest the arbitrators with authority to decide virtually any claim that could arise in relation to the contract and its *356 performance. Indeed, as the defendant itself aptly argued in support of its motion for a stay pending arbitration,
... the arbitration procedure applies to all disputes arising in connection with the subcontract. It would have been difficult, if not impossible, for the parties to have drafted a broader аrbitration provision. This broad language, coupled with the national policy favoring a liberal construction of arbitration agreements, makes it clear that the disputes involved in this case are well within the scope of the arbitration agreement. 3
Convinced that the arbitration clause did indeed cover all of the plaintiffs claims, including the claims for compensatory and punitive damages for fraud,
see generally Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
At this point, the defendant first objected that the arbitrators had awarded punitive damages and that to do so was beyond their authority. In order to clarify the issue, the Court on April 26, 1984, ordered that the award be resubmitted to the same arbitration panel for an explicit breakdown of the claims for which damages were provided. Subsequently, on August 21, 1984, the panel issued the following award: 4
... [W]e the undersigned Arbitrators find the following facts:
1. That KAJIMA INTERNATIONAL, INC., did in fact breach its contract to WILLOUGHBY ROOFING & SUPPLY CO., INC., and that the compensatory damages suffered by WILLOUGHBY ROOFING & SUPPLY CO., INC., were $41,091.25.
2. We further find that KAJIMA INTERNATIONAL, INC., did make misrepresentations of material facts, that these facts were willfully made to deceive WILLOUGHBY ROOFING & SUPPLY CO., INC., that these misrepresentations were made by KAJIMA INTERNATIONAL, INC., to be relied upon by WILLOUGHBY ROOFING & SUPPLY CO., INC., and that in fact WILLOUGHBY ROOFING & SUPPLY CO., INC., did rely on these misrepresentations and that WILLOUGHBY ROOFING & SUPPLY CO., INC., suffered damages as a result of this reliance.
For thesе wrongful acts of KAJIMA INTERNATIONAL, INC., we find that KAJIMA INTERNATIONAL, INC., should pay punitive damages of $108,-908.15.
Therefore, Arbitrators, AWARD as follows:
A. Award compensatory damages in the amount of $41,091.25 to be paid by KAJIMA INTERNATIONAL, INC.
B. Award punitive damages in the amount of $108,908.75 to be paid by KAJIMA INTERNATIONAL, INC.
Now unhappy with the bed it has made for itself, Kajima no longer wishes to lie in it. Consequently, Kajima now seeks an order vacating this award on two separate grounds: (1) the contract between the parties does not authorize the arbitrators to award punitive damages; and (2) even if the contract does authorize the arbitrators to make such an award, public policy prohibits them from doing so. As discussed below, however, neither of these arguments is sufficiently persuasive to displace the plenary deference traditionally owing to the decisions of arbitrators as a matter of federal policy. 5
*357 DISCUSSION
I.
The contention that the arbitration clause involved in this case is not broad enough to empower the arbitration panel to award punitive damages is one that must fail. As the defendant has candidly admitted, “it would have been difficult, if not impossible, for the parties to have drafted a broader arbitration provision.” 6 Moreover, the arbitration clause incorporates by reference the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules. Rule 43 of those rules provides that
The arbitrator may grant any remedy or relief which is just and equitable and within the terms of the agreement of the parties (emphasis supplied).
When the extremely broad arbitration clause is read in light of the equally broad grant of remedial power in Rule 43, it is clear that the parties by their contract have authorized the arbitrators to award punitive damages.
Cf. Willis v. Shearson/American Express, Inc.,
[The] mandate clearly is that in interpreting [an] agreement and fashioning a remedy in accordance with that agreement, an arbitrator is given broad latitude and discretion. His remedy need not be specifically authorized by the agreement. And, so long as his remedy represents a *358 fair solution to the dispute, the remedy awarded should be affirmed. Reviewing courts should be extremely reluctant to substitute their interpretation of the agreement for that of the arbitrator____ [H]is awards should be upheld so long as he does not disregard or modify plain and unambiguous provisions of [the] agreement.
General Telephone Co. of Ohio v. Communications Workers of America,
In the present case, the award of punitive damages is neither explicitly nor implicitly prohibited by the agreement. Indeed, it was all but expressly authorized. Although the defendant has cited certain labor cases which lend some support to thе theory that an arbitrator has no power to award punitive damages absent express authority,
see, e.g., International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 450 v. Mid-Valley, Inc.,
II.
This brings us to the defendant’s second contention. Does public policy prohibit the parties to a contract from vesting an arbitration panel with authority to consider their claims for punitive damages for fraud in the inducement or performance of the contract? The Court thinks not.
It is true, as Kajima points out, that certain state courts have held that under the law of those states arbitrators cannot award punitive damages even if the parties authorize them to do so.
See, e.g., Garrity v. Lyle Stuart, Inc.,
In enacting § 2 of the federal Act, Congress declared a national policy favoring arbitration and withdrew the power of states to require a judicial forum *360 for the resolution of сlaims which the contracting parties agreed to resolve by arbitration____ We discern only two ■limitations on the enforceability of arbitration provisions governed by the Federal Arbitration Act: they must be part of a written contract evidencing a transaction in interstate commerce, and such clauses may be revoked upon ‘grounds as exist at law or equity for the revocation of any contract.’ We see nothing in the Act indicating that the broad principle of enforceability is subject to any additional limitations under state law.
— U.S. at —,
Southland Corp. v. Keating
firmly establishes that it is the “federal substantive law” of arbitrability that governs questions such as the one presented here.
Id.
— U.S. at —,
It is clear that federal policy does not prohibit the award of punitive damages by arbitrators if the parties’ agreement is found to confer upon them the authority to make such an award.
Willis v. Shearson/American Express,
Other cases stand for the same proposition. Thus, in
Sweeney v. Morganroth,
Even assuming that the award is a penalty — no small assumption under either state or federal law — where, as here the contract expressly provides the arbitrator with the power to grant the award, and recognizing the substantial leeway which must be granted an arbitrator in fashioning remedies ..., the award seems wholly consistent with the prevailing law, both state and federal; it certainly does not evidence manifest disregard therefor.
Similarly, in
Cadillac Auto Co. v. Metro Auto Salesmen,
The old Fifth Circuit also sanctioned the award of punitive damages by arbitrators in appropriate cases, reasoning that the judiciary owes “considerable deference” to the decisions of arbitrators and that arbitrators “must ... be free to decide more than which party is right or which party is wrong.”
Local 369, Bakery & Confectionery Workers Int. Union v. Cotton Baking Co., Inc.,
Other cases lend varying degrees of support to the authority of arbitrators to make punitive awards.
16
Perhaps the most direct treatment of the federal policy on this issue, however, is found in
Willis v. Shearson/American Express,
This Court agrees that there is no public policy bar which prevents arbitrators from considering claims for punitive damages. The Supreme Court has emphasized that the arbitration process can be a viable method of dispute resolution only if “it serves as a vehicle for handling any and all disputes that arise under the agreement,”
United Steelworkers v. American Mfg. Co.,
The defendant insists, however, that because an award of punitive damages serves not only to punish the present wrongdoer for willful or wanton misconduct, but also to deter others in society at large, the power to award them should not be wielded by anyone other than a judge or jury. The defendant raises the spectre of overly partial arbiters manipulated by the party in a superior bargaining position, who may award punitive damages out of bias and prejudice. That spectre has more bark than bite, however, for the Arbitration Act exрressly provides for the vacation of an arbitral award where the award was “procured by corruption, fraud or undue means,” 9 U.S.C. § 10(a), or where there was “evident partiality or corruption in the arbitrators.” 9 U.S.C. § 10(b). The mere possibility of bias or corruption no more justifies a wholesale withdrawal of the authority of arbitrators to make an award of punitive damages than it would a wholesale withdrawal of their authority to resolve disputes at all. If corruption or evident partiality in fact surfaces, naturally an award of punitive damages emanating from such circumstances should be set aside. Clearly, however, the possibility of an occasional abuse of power is no grounds for an absolute bar on the award of punitive damages by arbitrators.
Kajima also complains that to allow arbitrators to hear and decide claims for punitive damages is to displace the court and jury as an engine for imposing a social sanction designed more to punish and deter than to compensate. Of course, the argument that it is unfair to allow an arbitrator to displace a court and jury is one that has been sounded before. Not only litigants but state courts as well have questioned the ability of arbitrators to properly dispense justice. Many state courts have therefore declared contractual agreements to submit all disputes to arbitration to be totally unenforceable as a matter оf public policy because they “defeat the jurisdiction of the courts.”
See, e.g., Wells v. Mobile County Board of Realtors,
The wisdom of allowing arbitrators to consider and resolve issues of punitive damages becomes all the more plain when we consider the practical effect of a contrary result. Defendant urges that merely by agreeing to arbitration, a plaintiff has automatically forfeited his right to punitive damages because arbitrators are prohibited by public policy from awarding such damages. Thus, by entering an arbitration agreement the plaintiff has contractually waived his right to punitive damages.
Cf. Baselski v. Paine, Webber, Jackson & Curtis,
Even if the plaintiff who has agreed to arbitration is not deemed to have automatically waived his right to be heard on the issue of punitive damages, the practical effect of a bar on the arbitrability of such issues would be unsatisfactory. In essence, where tort and contract claims are mixed and punitive damages are sought, to
*364
follow the
Garrity
rule in these circumstances would require two trials — one before the arbitrator and then “a separate judicial trial on essentially the same facts— obviously a wasteful exercise.” Note,
Punitive Damages in Arbitration: The Search for a Workable Rule,
63 Cornell L.Rev. at 299.
21
This would undermine the chief advantages and purposes of arbitration — to relieve congestion in the courts and to achieve a quick, inexpensive and binding resolution of all disputes that arise between the parties to an agreement.
See Ultracashmere House, Ltd. v. Meyer,
Where parties have selected arbitration as a means of dispute resolution, they have presumably done so in recognition of the speed and inexpensiveness of the arbitral process; federal courts ill serve these aims and that of the facilitation of commercial intercourse____ It is particularly necessary to accord the ‘narrowest of readings’ to the excess-of-authority provision of Section 10(d). That provision does not, it must be stressed, confer on courts a general equitable power to substitute a judicial resolution of a dispute for an arbitral one____
Davis v. Chevy Chase Financial, Ltd.,
CONCLUSION
It may be, as the defendant belatedly claims, that the informalities and lack of judicial review attendant to arbitration render that method of dispute resolution less desirable than a full judicial trial when it comes to the airing of claims for punitive damages. But having chosen arbitration as the method of resolution of “all claims, disputes and other matters ... arising out of or relating to” its agreement with Willoughby Roofing, and having vested the arbitrators with authority to grant “any remedy or relief which is just and equitable,” it may fairly be said that Kajima got what it bargained for. The words of Judge Learned Hand are most pertinent in this regard:
Arbitration may or may not be a desirable substitute for trials in courts; as to that the parties must decide in each instance. But when they have adopted it, they must be content with its informalities; they may not hedge it about with those procedural limitations which it is precisely its purpose to avoid. They must content themselves with looser approximations to the enforcement of their rights than those that the law accords them, when they resort to its machinery.
American Almond Products Co. v. Consolidated Pecan Sales Co., Inc.,
*365 If parties to an arbitration agreement desire to exclude the issue of punitive damages from the consideration of an arbitrator and reserve it for judicial hearing, they are free to specify that in their contract. Otherwise, the strong federal policies favoring arbitrability of issues and remedial flexibility of arbitrators will govern. Those principles are dispositive of this case.
Accordingly, the motion to vacate or modify the arbitrator’s award will be DENIED, and the Court will enter a judgment in accordance with the arbitral award.
Notes
The Court acknowledges the exceptional contribution of Michael R. Pennington, Law Clerk, to the preparation of this opinion.
. See Defendant's Memorandum in Support of Motion to Stay Judicial Proceedings Pending Arbitration, at p. 8.
. The defendant also moved to vacate or modify the award of compensatory damages, alleging a lack of evidence to support certain aspects of the award. These contentions have been overruled by a separate order.
. Defendant's Memоrandum in Support of Motion to Stay Judicial Proceedings Pending Arbitration, at p. 8. (Emphasis in original).
. This more explicit award, like its predecessor, was signed by only two of the three arbitrators on the panel.
. Since the arbitration provision in this case is contained in a contract evidencing a transaction involving interstate commerce, the policies and provisions of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1
et seq.,
govern all questions of the validity, interpretation, construction and enforceability of the arbitration agreement.
See Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury
*357
Construction Corp.,
. See note 3, supra, and accompanying text.
. Arbitration clauses expressly withholding from arbitrators the authority to decide claims for punitive damages are certainly not uncommon.
See, e.g., Automotive, Petroleum and Allied Industries Employees Union, Local 618 v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
. See note 3, supra, and accompanying text.
. In truth, none of these cases actually involved factual findings or allegations sufficient to support the award of punitive damages under applicable substantive law. The case sub judice is decidedly different in this respect.
. Even if other circuits may subscribe to the proposition that arbitrators have no authority to award punitive damages absent an express conferral of such authority, that is not the governing principle in this Circuit. Under the rule of
Bonner v. Prichard,
. The arbitration provision in the present case is even broader than that found to authorize the award of punitive damages in
Willis,
by virtue of the incorporation by reference of Rule 43 of the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules, which expressly authorizes the arbitrators to grant “any remedy or relief which is just and equitable____”
Compare Willis,
. Even if the original arbitration clause were not broad enough in and of itself to authorize the award of punitive damages, by voluntarily submitting the plaintiff’s fraud claims to arbitration without reservation of the claim made for punitive damages and without objecting to the authority of the arbitrators to award the claimed relief, Kajima in effect extended the authority of the arbitrators to include these matters. This is the rule of
Piggly Wiggly Operators’ Warehouse, Inc. v. Piggly Wiggly Operators' Warehouse Independent Truck Drivers Union,
. While these cases are labor cases, the Court finds unconvincing the argument that labor cases are sui generis in this respect. The Arbitration Act provides no basis for such a distinction.
. On appeal,
Helgesteel
was reversed on other grounds.
. While the
Cotton
court was not entirely convinced that the award in that case was punitive, the Court held, in the alternative at least, that if the award was in fact punitive, it was nevertheless supported by the contract and hence enforceable.
.
See, e.g., Joint Board of Cloak, Skirt & Dressmakers Union
v.
Senco, Inc.,
. It is disturbing to the Court that although Willis is the one federal case which most squarely addresses the issues presented here and flatly rejects the Garrity rule, neither side called the Court’s attention to the existence of this close and direct precedent. Unfortunately, the same is true of many of the cases cited in this opinion.
. In fact, it has been said that an arbitration panel’s remedial discretion is so broad that it may sometimes grant equitable relief that even a court could not.
Sperry International Trade, Inc. v. Government of Israel,
. The general right of recovery for fraud in Alabama is established by § 6-5-101 Ala.Code (1975).
. Compare Note, Arbitration: the Award of Punitive Damages as a Public Policy Question, 43 Brooklyn L.Rev. 546, 551 (1976): "The result [of application of the Garrity rule prohibiting arbitrators from awarding punitive damages] may be that incomplete recompense is made to an innocent party, while a guileful defendant is free to act with impunity without any fear of punitive sanction. Clearly, the imposition of punitive sanctions might lead to an unfair result where, as in arbitration proceedings, a party could use his superior bargaining position to improper ends. Nevertheless, the policy favoring the complete and fair resolution of private disputes through arbitration will be likely to suffer as a result of the restriction the Garrity court has placed upon an arbitrator’s power to award a full range of damages.”
.
Compare Janmort Leasing, Inc. v. Econo-Car International, Inc.,
